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New-Car Sales Projected to Gain 11%-12% in October

DETROIT -- (
TheStreet) -- Auto sales continued to be a bright spot in the economy in October, even though Hurricane Sandy likely diminished sales in the Northeast in the last few days of the month.

Edmunds.com, LMC Automotive and TrueCar.com were all forecasting October light-vehicle sales around 1.1 million units, up between 11% and 12% from the same month a year earlier. TrueCar said the seasonally adjusted annual light-vehicle sales rate is expected to total 14.8 million, the best October rate since 2007, when the rate was 16.1 million vehicles. The SAAR dipped slightly from its 14.9 million rate in September, TrueCar said.

"It is becoming clear that the U.S. automotive market is finally approaching a stage of a more natural level of demand, which has been accelerated by increasing consumer confidence and a need to replace aging vehicles," said LMC analyst Jeff Schuster, in a prepared statement. "This stability at a higher level is taking the edge off the risk factors for the remainder of 2012 and into 2013, as the U.S. economy wrestles with the European crisis."

"October was a robust start to Q4 sales with most manufacturers posting double digit gains while continuing to lower incentives spending," Toprak said, in a prepared statement. TrueCar said industry average incentive fell 2.9% from September and 5.6% from the same month a year earlier.

Edmunds.com also projected an October SAAR of 14.8 million. But Edmunds said Hurricane Sandy likely is impacting auto sales in the Northeast, which accounts for about 20% of all U.S. auto sales.

"The storm likely will have an impact on October sales, especially since it comes at the end of the month, but those sales won't disappear altogether," said Edmunds analyst Jessica Caldwell, in a prepared statement. "If anything, it'll make November an interesting month to watch, not just for the deferred sales, but also because hurricane-damaged vehicles could unexpectedly force several buyers back into the market."

Jefferies analyst Peter Nesvold estimates that roughly 100,000 sales could be lost this month due to Hurricane. "These should return in November," he said.

What brands could be affected by the hurricane? Luxury brands are popular in New York, Philadelphia and Washington, Edmunds said. The three markets accounted for 25% of Acura sales, 24% of Mercedes-Benz sales, and 23% of BMW, Inifinti and Volvo sales.
Honda(HMC - Get Report) is the most popular brand in New York, with 14% of the market's new car registrations this year;
Ford(F - Get Report) is most popular in Philadelphia, also with 14% of new car registrations, and
Toyota(TM - Get Report) is most popular in Washington with 16% of new car registrations.